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Triceratops Frill Bone Fossil Dinosaur Hell Creek Montana USA Cretaceous with Metal Stand COA Genuine Upper Maastrichtian Specimen

£51.00

(Actual as seen)

Only 1 left in stock

SKU: P00755 Category:

Description

Genuine Triceratops Dinosaur Frill Fragment Fossil

This listing is for a genuine fossil Dinosaur Triceratops frill fragment bone from the world-famous Hell Creek Formation of Montana, USA, dating to the Upper Cretaceous Period, Maastrichtian stage. The specimen is supplied with a metal display stand, making it an excellent natural history display piece for collectors of dinosaur fossils, prehistoric bones, Hell Creek Formation fossils, and Cretaceous vertebrate remains.

The fossil shown in the photographs is the actual specimen you will receive. This is a carefully chosen piece with strong display appeal, preserving part of the bony frill from one of the most iconic horned dinosaurs ever discovered. Full sizing and scale can be seen in the listing photographs.

Fossil Type, Species and Classification

Triceratops was a large ceratopsian dinosaur, best known for its three facial horns, powerful beaked skull, and broad protective frill. The fossil belongs to the genus Triceratops, one of the most recognisable dinosaurs from the Late Cretaceous of North America. Triceratops is a member of the family Ceratopsidae, within the order Ornithischia, a major dinosaur group that includes many herbivorous species with specialised hips, jaws, and teeth adapted for plant-based diets.

The frill was part of the skull structure, forming a broad shield-like extension at the back of the head. In life, this bony frill may have served several purposes, including muscle attachment, visual display, species recognition, protection, and social signalling. Fragmentary frill bones are highly collectable because they come from the skull area of the animal, one of the most distinctive anatomical regions of Triceratops.

Hell Creek Formation, Montana, USA

This fossil comes from the Hell Creek Formation in Montana, USA, one of the most important dinosaur-bearing geological formations in the world. The Hell Creek Formation dates to the very end of the Cretaceous Period, during the Maastrichtian stage, approximately 66 to 68 million years ago. It is especially famous for preserving the final dinosaur ecosystems before the end-Cretaceous extinction event.

The Hell Creek Formation has yielded remains of many legendary prehistoric animals, including Triceratops, Tyrannosaurus rex, Edmontosaurus, Ankylosaurus, Pachycephalosaurus, crocodilians, turtles, fish, plants, and early mammals. Fossils from this formation provide a remarkable insight into the last chapter of non-avian dinosaur life in North America.

Geology and Depositional Environment

During the Late Cretaceous, the region that is now Montana was very different from today. The Hell Creek environment included river channels, floodplains, wetlands, ponds, and forested lowland habitats. Sediments were deposited by ancient rivers and seasonal flood systems, gradually burying bones, plant material, and other remains within sands, silts, and muds.

The preservation of dinosaur bone in this formation is often linked to rapid burial in floodplain or channel deposits. Over millions of years, mineral-rich groundwater moved through the buried remains, replacing and strengthening the original bone structure through fossilisation. This process allowed durable fragments, such as pieces of skull, limb bone, vertebrae, and frill, to survive deep geological time.

Morphology and Display Features

This Triceratops frill fragment represents part of the bony cranial shield that extended from the rear of the skull. Frill bone can vary in thickness, texture, curvature, and surface detail depending on its original position on the skull and the degree of preservation. Dinosaur bone fragments from the Hell Creek Formation often show natural surface texture, fossilised internal structure, mineralisation, and weathered edges created by ancient burial and later geological exposure.

The included metal stand allows the fossil to be displayed upright or at an attractive viewing angle, making it suitable for a cabinet, desk, fossil collection, educational display, museum-style arrangement, or natural history room. As a genuine fossil, it may show natural cracks, repairs, matrix traces, surface wear, mineral staining, and irregularities consistent with ancient bone preservation.

Certificate of Authenticity

This fossil is a genuine specimen and includes a Certificate of Authenticity lifetime guarantee generic card. The certificate provides reassurance that the item is an authentic fossil specimen, not a replica or modern reproduction.

Ideal For Collectors and Dinosaur Enthusiasts

A Triceratops frill fragment from the Hell Creek Formation is a highly desirable addition to any fossil collection. It combines a famous dinosaur genus, a classic North American locality, an important geological formation, and strong educational value. This specimen is ideal for collectors of dinosaur bone, Cretaceous fossils, fossil skull material, Montana fossils, Hell Creek Formation specimens, and display-ready prehistoric items.

This is a genuine piece of dinosaur history from one of the most celebrated fossil formations on Earth, presented with a metal stand and certificate for an impressive and authentic display.

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